Something tells me I could be doing much better because I spend many hours a day just to learn 60 cards. Between the first review and the last, including breaks, maybe 7 hours will have passed. I've read comments where people say their retention is ~90% and they only spend 2-3 hours a day learning 45 cards (WHAT?!).
I've tried several approaches. I'll explain what happens in the anki stats image below.
1. In the beginning, I studied just 20 new cards/day mixed in with reviews all on Anki's standard settings. The amount of cards I had to "relearn" seems surprising now.
2. I took a day off, then experimented with cramming forgotten cards on Custom Study. The next day, you can see virtually no red (relearned cards). I felt pretty happy that day. The next day, however, wasn't so good. I forgot a lot of the young cards and attributed my previously much higher recall to the cramming I did.
3. 60 cards/day begins (alternating 20 new cards with forgotten cards within the last 1-3 days). Lots of forgotten cards again, it does not feel good to be sick of forgetting. In fact, I find it infinitely better to be sick of seeing a kanji than failing to recall it. I took a day off because it didn't seem to work.
4. Started back up, thinking I'd have another crappy day, my recall was phenomenal. I did it again and again and again and again and again, with a little drop in performance because I chose to SRS the lot before going to bed once. The next day, despite doing that, I could still recall >90% of the kanji and thought I'd give cramming a break (wondering if I'd been wasting time). Then it happened. Worst day of my SRS life.
![[Image: anki.png]](http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/7669/anki.png)
Is there some kind of magic method people are using to study just 2-3 hours a day and maintain a level of retention that I need twice as long to keep up with? Or, maybe, my memory is below average(?) D:
Edit: also should point out that the cards I'd "over-review" weren't forgotten that day, only a huge portion of the new cards from the day before.
I've tried several approaches. I'll explain what happens in the anki stats image below.
1. In the beginning, I studied just 20 new cards/day mixed in with reviews all on Anki's standard settings. The amount of cards I had to "relearn" seems surprising now.
2. I took a day off, then experimented with cramming forgotten cards on Custom Study. The next day, you can see virtually no red (relearned cards). I felt pretty happy that day. The next day, however, wasn't so good. I forgot a lot of the young cards and attributed my previously much higher recall to the cramming I did.
3. 60 cards/day begins (alternating 20 new cards with forgotten cards within the last 1-3 days). Lots of forgotten cards again, it does not feel good to be sick of forgetting. In fact, I find it infinitely better to be sick of seeing a kanji than failing to recall it. I took a day off because it didn't seem to work.
4. Started back up, thinking I'd have another crappy day, my recall was phenomenal. I did it again and again and again and again and again, with a little drop in performance because I chose to SRS the lot before going to bed once. The next day, despite doing that, I could still recall >90% of the kanji and thought I'd give cramming a break (wondering if I'd been wasting time). Then it happened. Worst day of my SRS life.
![[Image: anki.png]](http://img14.imageshack.us/img14/7669/anki.png)
Is there some kind of magic method people are using to study just 2-3 hours a day and maintain a level of retention that I need twice as long to keep up with? Or, maybe, my memory is below average(?) D:
Edit: also should point out that the cards I'd "over-review" weren't forgotten that day, only a huge portion of the new cards from the day before.
Edited: 2013-03-02, 12:14 am


![[Image: tumblr_mj0vpn77JA1ql4vq2o1_500.png]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/ea8e5ab605840fcbdc689a1bd4b55d87/tumblr_mj0vpn77JA1ql4vq2o1_500.png)
![[Image: pvis.png]](http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/1051/pvis.png)